2006 Equality Lobby Day

Last year was my first lobby day wtih Equality Virginia and my first time in the General Assembly Building in Richmond. I wasn’t sure I would be able to bring a camera in so I, with reluctance, left it home. However, I found out that bringing a camera in wasn’t a problem at all and so this year, the camera got to join the party.

The saddest part of the day was knowing the state senate was passing the anti-marriage amendment while we were there. It wasn’t a surprise, we knew it was going to be happening, but I find it difficult to understand how anyone can pass legislation or put an amendment on the ballot that has no purpose other than to hurt a group of people. I suppose that is naive, but even having seen the process play out over the last two years, I don’t understand that motivation.

However, putting that aside and getting back to photography…I didn’t take too many photos, but I did get a few. Next year, I think I’ll try to be a bit more focused on documenting the day.

Click an image below to enlarge it or view the set on flickr.

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Equality Fairfax 2005 Fundraiser Party

I had the pleasure of attending the Equality Fairfax annual fundraiser party for the first time. Barry and Rick were kind enough to open their home up to us and we descended upon them.

I wandered around with my camera, annoying people with the flash, but sacrifices have to be made for art. Or, if not art, then at least documentary evidence. In any event, I managed some photos of what turned out to be a very enjoyable event.

Click an image below to enlarge it or view the set on flickr.

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Tarara Winery Visit

Equality Fairfax and Equality Loudon members met up for a wine tasting and tour at Tarara Winery.

Though the weather was rainy and cool, it was worth the drive to taste ten different wines and see a bit of how the wine was made. If you get a chance to drive out there and do a wine tasting, take the time. It is worthwhile.

Click an image below to enlarge it or view the set on flickr.

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Equality Fairfax Potluck Dinner

Equality Fairfax held a potluck dinner in Annandale to discuss the upcoming elections for statewide office (governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general) as well as the House of Delegate races for the local area. This dinner focused on the southern half of the county and was the companion dinner to one the week earlier for the northern half of the county.

I neglected to bring the camera to the first potluck. The room was dim enough that photography without a flash would have been challenging at best so it’s probably just as well. This room was better lit and I had the camera with me so I snapped a few photos during the proceedings.

Click an image below to enlarge it or view the set on flickr.

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Responding to the Arguments Against Gay Marriage

On Monday, September 19, 2005, I attended a meeting at McLean Bible Church. At this meeting, State Senator Ken Cuccinelli, Delegate Richard Black, Virginia Cobb of the Family Foundation and Patricia Phillips of the Concerned Women for America spoke in support of the proposed amendment that would ban same-sex marriage or recognition for anything trying to emulate marriage in Virginia.

As I listened to the arguments against same-sex marriage, I couldn’t help wonder what the fuss was about. Although I was too young to remember it, I later learned about the case of Loving vs. Virginia in school. In this case, argued before the U.S. Supreme Court, the Commonwealth of Virginia contended before the Supreme Court that its ban prohibiting blacks and whites from marrying was both proper and valid. The trial judge in Virginia
said, as part of his justification, “Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents.
And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix.”
The implication is that permitting marriages to people with differing skin colors was contrary to God’s plan. In
many of the arguments of the day the words, “unnatural”, and ”against nature” were heard.

Thirty-eight years later, Senator Cuccinelli, speaking about same-sex marriage said that it was “contrary to the laws of God and nature”. Delegate Black called it “unnatural”. This has a familiar ring. Virginia legislators have a long history of trying to deny civil rights.

Senator Cuccinelli claimed that allowing same-sex marriage would “rip society apart” though he didn’t supply any justification for this. For the last year, Massachusetts has allowed same-sex marriage. Brian Lees, a Republican legislator in Massachusetts recently said, “Gay marriage has begun, and life has not changed for the citizens of the commonwealth, with the exception of those who can now marry.“ What is most significant about Mr. Lees is that he was one of the co-sponsors of the Massachusetts marriage amendment in 2004.

Many provinces of Canada have allowed same-sex marriage for even longer and society in our northern neighbor does not appear to be on the verge of collapse. The Netherlands, where same-sex marriage has been allowed does have one study that Ms. Phillips claims shows the harm of same-sex marriage. However, the facts do not appear to support the claim. Marriage rates did not measurably drop nor did divorce rates measurably increase according to a July 2004 paper by Dr. M. V. Lee Badgett of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Even if the study she referenced were correct about its facts, correlation does not imply cause and there is no data to suggest that same-sex marriage hurts society in any way.

All four speakers claimed that marriage had to be protected. Over the last year, I have asked several legislators exactly how allowing two people of the same-sex to get married harms their marriage. I have yet to get a response. It seems quite the opposite to me. Allowing same-sex marriage would strengthen marriage by allowing loving, committed couples to formalize their relationship in a way that would promote strong family values.

They also claimed that same-sex marriage was a “biological impossibility”. They implied that marriage only existed for procreation and that anyone who had a marriage where the father did not sire and the mother did not bear the child was living less than the ideal marriage. Of course, procreation is only one of the reasons people marry. I know many heterosexual couples that either through circumstance or choice do not have children. Does this lack invalidate their marriages? All of them would loudly proclaim that it does not.

Finally, I’d like to address the one concrete example that was given. Delegate Black said that one of the reasons that same-sex couples wanted to marry was hospital access. He went on to say that it was a non-issue, that no hospital had ever banned a partner from visiting. I suspect he is wrong but even if he were right, he has missed the most important part of the issue. He said that it was as simple as the partner in the hospital saying it was OK for the other partner to visit. What if this person is unconscious? What if medical decisions need to be made? While a medical power of attorney can prevent this problem, what if the document is not present? For him to dismiss matters of life and death as mere access is
disingenuous and misses the point. This is just one of many rights that married couples take for granted yet we are forced to scramble through the legal system to protect our families because people like Delegate Black refuse to recognize the legitimacy of our families. His refusal hurts not just lesbian and gay Virginians but our children.

In closing, I’d again like to focus on a statement by Senator Cuccinelli. He believes that marriage is in trouble. He believes that divorce and single-parent families threaten the family. Yet, instead of trying to solve those problems, he has chosen to ”protect” marriage by keeping it available only to heterosexual couples. I suggest that he actually focus on the real problem instead of attacking a group of people because it is politically popular.

In the 1950′s it was common to equate homosexuality with the communist threat. In recent years, some prominent people have claimed that gays were somehow responsible for terrorism. The truth is that most gay people, like most straight people, are good, hardworking people who love their country and their families. Passing the marriage amendment would do nothing to protect marriage but it would institutionalize discrimination against gay and lesbian Virginians.

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